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Whose Cost of Living?

Review of Economic Studies 1959 26(2), 126
Journal Article Whose Cost of Living? Get access S. J. Prais S. J. Prais London and Jerusalem Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Review of Economic Studies, Volume 26, Issue 2, February 1959, Pages 126–134, https://doi.org/10.2307/2296170 Published: 01 February 1959

Non-Linear Estimates of the Engel Curves

Review of Economic Studies 1952 20(2), 87
Journal Article Non-Linear Estimates of the Engel Curves Get access S. J. Prais S. J. Prais Cambridge Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Review of Economic Studies, Volume 20, Issue 2, 1952, Pages 87–104, https://doi.org/10.2307/2295843 Published: 01 January 1952

The Statistical Conditions for a Change in Business Concentration

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1958 40(3), 268
ONE of the ways of tracing changes in business concentration is to compare the rates of growth of firms of different sizes. If firms that are large at a certain date subsequently grow on the average more rapidly than small firms, business concentration will obviously have increased. It is not however always realized that the obverse proposition does not hold; that is, if the large firms have grown less rapidly than the small firms then -however paradoxical it may seem -concentration does not necessarily decrease. A related paradox -that associated with what is known as jobbing arises if we look at the average rate of growth achieved in the past by firms that are large today, and compare it with that for smaller firms. This differs from the previous example, since we are now looking backward in time instead of forward; as will be seen below, the two points of view are symmetrically related to one another. The matter is more complicated in its logic than appears at first sight, and it is perhaps not surprising that many careful empirical investigations are to be found in the literature which are vitiated by a logical fault in the inferences drawn from them. The errors are generally pointed out subsequently, only to be repeated by the next generation. The present note attempts to give a simplified but systematic exposition of the necessary conditions for changes in concentration; the basic algebra has already been set out from a different point of view in an earlier paper,' but the approach adopted here may be easier to follow. The statistician will recognize all that follows as being no more than the simple theory of in the sense of Galton (not in the modern sense, where regression is often taken as equivalent to the procedure of fitting a line by least-squares). Our understanding of the problem owes much to the review by Hotelling in the Journal of the American Statistical Association, xvIII (933), 463-65 of Secrist's The Triumph of Mediocrity in Business (Chicago, I933), and the subsequent discussion, ibid., XIX (I934), I96-2 00.2 Similar arguments are to be found in other contexts in the writings of Professor Milton Friedman.